Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 23, Hammond, Lake County, 12 July 1919 — Page 4
Page Four.
THE TIMES. July 12, 1919
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHSN3 COMPANY.
The Lake County Times Dally except Saturday and Cunday. entered at the postoftu-e In Hammond, June . 1306. The Tin's East Cnieig-o-Indlana Harbor. dally excert iunday Entered at the postofflca In tail Chicago, Nov ?mt.er 1J. I'ilt. The Lake County Time? Saturday an1 Weekly Edition. Entered at the pos'offlce in HmmonJ, February 4. J914The Gary Evening Times Pally except Sunday. Entered at the postofrtce In Gary. Aprtl IS. 1913. All under the act of March 3. 18J9. a second-class matter.
roKExcm ASYKKTisziro orrica.
Q. LOGAN PAINE & CO..
-CHICAGO.
Hammonl (private exchange) 31A0. 3101, 3183 (Call for whatever di-rartrnent wanted.) O-ary Office Telephone 13 Vaau &, Thnmpsnn. East Chicago Telophone 91 F L. Fvans. Es Chloaeo Tel. phone S12-R East Chic-ag-o (Tub Timk Telephone 3SS Indiana Harbor (N'ews Dealer) Telephone Sft T-"in Harbor (Reporter and Clasnf Adv ). .Telephone 2SS Whitingr ..Telephone SO-M Crown Point Telephone 43 . 7 h?v ,ny trouble rettlnir The Timws makes cornp.alnt immediately to the Circulation Department. T,HE. Times will not be responsible for the return of any unsolicited article or lete-s and will not notice anonymous communications. Short signed letter or reneral Interest printed at discretion.
OTHXB. PAPBBS ITT THX CAZ.TOTBT MOIOIT. It i, vmMl. ?.rtC'!v' your copy of Ths Trwes a promptlo.f e? SJ" thZ past- p!as "t think It bas been service .""J.vf? on Remember that the mall reneral from .h'J l1 UPwJ to ! that complaint, art T T.. ?,u.'.y sources about the train and mall er1 mtrtZiZZ II h," Jncred Its mailin equipment ana rromrt ln.r,'.Stly t0v.rech iim Ptros on time. Ba w? wft prornVtl" " yU d nf " y0Uf PPr n1
There Is only room for one flag in Lake county ar.d that is the Stars and Stripes. There is room for only one language and that is the language of the people of the United States.
the last to Fbirk frcm the ifrsue which they to force. And I will say further, U to stand for ths rights of the senate, as a co-equal part of the treaty-making power is a Manifestation of partisanship, then I am a partisan; if to demand, that the people of the United States shall have a right to make up their own minds as to whether or not we shall put ourselves under the domination of the balance of the wlrld. if to regard our free institutions as the greatest instrumentalities of government which the world now possesses and therefore worthy of preservation over oil others which exist in the world, if to love my country and our own people with my whole heart and soul above and beyond all other countries and peoples of the world if these things are manifestation of partisanship, then, thank God. I am a partisan. Senators of the opposition, you may make this a partisan issue if you choose, but if you do you must pay to the American people and to their posterity throughout all time the penalty which they will exact." WHY NOT KEEP THEM? During the war many substantial additions were, built at local factories by Uncle Sam. Bids have been received to "dismantle" them, which presumably is red tape for tearing them down. Why tear them down? In most cases they are thor oughiy serviceable and can easily be converted into peac? plants. It seems wanton waste to demolish perfectly good factory buildings just because some swivel-chair potentate got the hunch. Standard Forging Co. at Indiana Harbor, Standard Steel Car Co. at Hammond, American Steel Machinery Co. at Pullman, and the Western Steel Car & Foundry Co. at Hegewisch all have fine substantial government buildings on their grounds about to be "'dismantled,' un less some one gets a burst of human intelligence. The Calumet Record meekly submits the suggestion that a bargain be struck with these factories or at iept attempted. It would be a crime to wreck the buildings. How about it? asks that newspaper.
THAT'S mFFEBENT
a V W
TENTION! Here's Buddy!
J
COME CM ACQOSS , i 1 2'Y GET MS !!! J
HANl OVER ALL. THE.
VELVET YOU'VE
GOT
TO THE POWERS THAT BE The Boys Want to Come Home! Get 'Em Home Toot Sweet!
Lc en.
Morton rreack, oa of Mr. and Mrs. Fiem k. bus . nhxtdi for t hree years service in th- United States army at IndianapoliH.
I. VT, Wlckey, of East Chicago, va. ctivd word that his V v ar med in New Vurk fr'in merfjan aivl will bo homo in a wi.ek or ion dajs i V .-.lrj Iihn toon seral imimliB if a -' ine service and t-ay that hr- would rather do Iiik dghtiHK nw i.n m
Kaut Chicago.
Capt. Harry Law, cl Crown Point, whi h;,s Just i "Uirtieii from mrrx-ns where ho has lic on in th- modual corps, cam" fifpm his h. ni" in Itavt-tto to visit w H n l!i fathf-r nri'l mother for several days.
GIVE AND IT WILL BE GIVEN YOU. The only orphanage in the Calumet region is oper
. "fuiniie sisters in calumet and it is of
course entirely subsis-tent orr tire efforts of charitable France and Belgium, whenever conditions were anywhere people. These little fatherless and motherless tots must near normal, afternoon tea was served in the trencher to depend on charity until they reach the age where they'tne fighting men. They didn't fight any the worse for it.
TIFFIN IN THE SKY. One feature of the trans-Atlantic cruise of that British blimp which interests Americans attracts no attention at all in England. Every afternoon the aviators had their four o'clock tea precisely as usual. Fancy a score of husky men having tiffin in the clouds! But those Englishmen did it as a matter of course, just as if they had been at home. They did the same thing throughout the war. la
Mxka Oswaffo, of East Chicago, has beaten the rtcord fifteen minutes after ho itot into East Chicigo from overseas, he had hia civles donned. Now JliKe says " From now on vail rnc Mr.'
"Walter Fasaow, of Hob art, who has been overseas rlurlnc the past year, ha landed in the Maws and i.s btationed at Camp Mills. He express to receive hi") discharge within a couple of weeks.
The transport Saxoula, Tolos. and .
Valacia. arrived with 2.556 overseas;
troopa today, including motor companies, medical detachments and other, unitj. The laraeM unit arnvuiK was th 2:h repair unit of seventeen officers and fi -1 S men. commanded by Maj. Charles i;. Barrett, of Ruifalo.
Mrs. Rntb. Mackey, of Hobart, received a telegram vosiorday from her husband stating thu if had arrived safely from overseas, and that lie expected to return home within a few days. It. Dwight Mickey was overseas during the past ten months.
Sergeant Edward Kruno, of Hobart, v ho returmd recen'ly f rom ovrtf-eas. visited here for a fow days this week with his lather.
Mr. and Mrs. X,ouis Zcui, 2200 Jicksoii St.. vlary. Thursday receivid a me -sage announcing the mfv arrival on this side of their M.n John Zonk at Holx.ken. Soldier Zonk enlisted in the early pari of the war and has been over in .Franco for the rast eighteen months. He is a member of (.he 37th service company, signal corps. He is a brother of Willie Zonk. Gary Evening Times omv boy, and ha U- expected home some time within a wtek.
are self-sustaining. There is no duty more binding on humanity than the care of these poor little waifs whom
the hard-working and self-sacrificing Carmelite Sisterhood,' is a Hnn!" p Tbi nnmh. . ; : . , . . . . i
either, as their record show s, despite the deep-seated American notion that afternoon tea is enerva'ing.
At the worst, as a pick-up or a bridg-e-gap between
is adopting. Their number is increasing all the time, until 1 meals it is probably not inferior to the German glass of the cramped quarters of the orphanage w'jll have to be I leer or the American soda-water or cocktail.
added to. Employes of the Inland Steel Company of Indiana Harbor have undertaken to raise enough money to defray the cost of an additional building and heating plant and the project is one that cannot be praised too highly. It was only recently that this newspaper's attention was called by the Boy Scouts of Indiana Harbor to the fact that Supt. W. J. Lees of the Inland had made it possible for them to have an outing camp. The Inland is doing remarkable philanthropic and civic work. -It takes pains to interest itself in every worthy venture. It is not called upon to do these things for any other humanitarian reasons and when these really noble men go out among the people asking for finan-
At any rate, the English have now put their mark on the sky as they have on the sea and all other accessible realms of the globe. "Once an Englishman, always an Englishman." He carries his institutions with him. If he flew to Mars, he would follow the same dietetic ifgime and the same cours-e of action and the same manner of thinking all the way there, and continue cal'nly and unchangeably after he had annexed that planet- He would benevolently assimilate Mars Mars would nM assimilate him. A good lesson in success might be drawn Tron bat aeria! tea-pouring. The English, nationally and individually, have got somewhere because they have the coinage
TrtA Trye, wlti the United States air service tor two years, and Tom Burk with the infantry and overseas for elevo'i months, are back in t;ary and both th young men have again taken their old positions at the First National Rank at Gary. Before going in tho service Soldier Burke was married to Miss Isabel! Trost of Hammond, and they will make their future home at Gary. Walter Brown, fotmer paying teller at the First National Bank, who is at present with the United Mates navy, writes from Wales that he will be back in September nd ready to resume his old position.
Harry Wis. Gary aawspapar prassman, has arrived on this side from over a year's service in France and Uermanv. He is now at Camp Mills. N". V.. and expects to arrive home on Sunday or Monday.
cial contributions to aid this orphanage the people should I of their convictions, and insist on living their own life show their appreciation and subscribe whatever their though the heavens fall. The horizon may stand at an
means w-ill permit. We bespeak for them the liberal aid of the people of the Twin City for this deserving institution.
KNOX STRIPS THEM.
The chicanery of the Democrats in making the league;
of nations a party is.-;u and then trying to represent the oul
Republicans as having done so was clearly exposed by Senator Knox in his recent address in the senate on the resolution to take up the peace treaty and the league question separately. After asserting his own belief that in foreign affairs we should present a firm and united front, Senator Knox said: "If therefore, opposition or support of the league becomes a party issue in this country, it will not be upon my initiative nor with my partisan support. But if senators on the other side continue as a party to oppose all efforts to secure full consideration of this great matter, if they do not cease to listen to and to oby the mere fiat of a partisan executive, if they remain firm in their stand against the constitutional right of the senate fully and fairly to consider this question upon its merits, and if they persist in their denial of the sovereign right of the people
to deliberate upon reach a determination concerning it,!
angle of ninety degrees. The north pole may be sadly out of place. The earth itself may wabble. The wind may drive them northeast when they ought to be going southwest. Still, in their buffeted blimp, they take their tiffin imperturbably just the same. It is a symbol of eraFire material empire and also empire over one's own
IT GETS WORSE AND WORSE. Instead of improving or at least coming back to normal, the mail service is deteroriating more and more every day. It is a crime the way Burleson and his aides are serving the people. Letters and rapers are all the way from a day to three days late and sometimes longer. The war has been over for six months, but the postal service grows worse and worse. It is not only inside the postofficeg. but outside. The postoffice crews are overworked and poorly paid. Their heart is not in their work. The carriers are unable to work on schedule. The train mail service is positively a fright. Yet Burleson reigns supreme nothing can budge him. He is cock-of-the-walk and knows it. The complaints about the postoffice department are not local, they are nation-wide. And yet th Democratic party stands for it, expects
Brlmi-inff 214 oncers, 5.299 enlisted men and fifty-four civilians, including the 333th (Michigan) infantry, the. first complete unit of soldiers who fought o:i the frozen soil of Russia to arrive at Boston, the tr nort President Grant docked today a.nid a noisy welcome. Ar-.op.g tbe distinguished passengers cr Brig. Gen. Wm. P. Jackson and Maj. John C. I'hilhp. brother-in-law of Mayor Feters of Boston and brother of Assistant Secretary of State William Fhilips. Among the. units aboard wee the 339th infantry, field and staff. First and Second battalion, headquarters and supply companies, medical and casualty companies B, t. D. E, F. O, H and K. There were C.5f0 wounded solders from
New England w ho were sent to Camp I
Expected transport arrivals: Ubsratsr, New V'ik, July 17. 33;nd service battalion, less thirteen eftioprs: company A. ".24th service battalion: headquarters and company B. 33Kth service battaiion; company i. P.loth service battalioi.: ccmipany li. 52vth engineer s-ei vi. e battalion: 23rd. l.'4th and 2th depot t-erv ice companies; cuard company 117; detachment company A. 347th service battalion: thre casual companies and fifty general prisoners. Trinz Frederick "Wilhelm, New York, July 14; twenty-one casual companies; 1' 7 o t h and 236th military police, 367th and 402nd service park units; company I". 301st water tank train; camp hospital 52: nmety-one casual officers. 321 civilians and fifty-four general prisoners. The war department announced the foil., wing cabled corrections: "Saivage company 3. and not salens company 3, has been assigned to early convoy." Salvage company No. 5. quartermaster corps, is on the Walter A. Lukenbach, clue New York July 11. The 323rd bakery company. Camp Upton, is on board cruiser I'ueblo, due NewYork July 14.
VELVET YOU'VE O'VE VOU N GUN
GOT yjl V-TMAT'S PA R. Tnow , YA ' &i G BOO e ' "1 ( ,&N'T. ;T-r ( Wun
Fashion's Forecast By Annabel Worthington.
"See
LADY'S ONE PIECE APRON.
COSTS $100 TO WIN DIME
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE 1 KANSAS CITY. Mo. .July. It cost H. L. Tarbct. a taxicah driver, lino to win a ten-cent cigar. Tarbet ar.d Sl'.m Sanford. employed 1 y the same firm, made, the bet. Tho two started for tha Union station. They passed Officer Joseph Fainco, driving a car on List way to work. He stared in pursuit of the two cars as they sped by him. When the taxicabs arrived at th station Tarbet was first. "You win," said Sanford. Next day. in police court. Judge Edward Fleming heard the story. "Tou lose." he said to the two men. "It will cost you each just $100 for the )tttl gasoline classic you staged yesterday."
Efficiency is a matter of eourse when one Is garbed in an aproo like N'o. 934d. It is cut in kimono style and has elbow sleeves. The oral neck is slashed at etch side so that tbe apron may be ?asily end quickly slipped over the head. A belt slips through straps to hold in the fulness. The fancy pockets may be omitted if desired. T collar is trimmed wit bias folds. The lady's one pirce apron No. 9346 is cut in sixes 38. 40 and 44 inches bast measure. The 39-ineb size requires 3 yards 32 inch or" 3 yards 36 inch taaterisl. with yard 38 inch contrasting material and 94 yards bias biadiac Price 10 cents.
If this, sir, is to be the party attitude of senators who op- Ithe people to stand for it and will expect the people to pose, then I say here and now. in all soberness, I shall be vote for it next year.
jf '
TIME TO SAVE
3
Compounded Semi-Annually Deposits made on or before July 13th bear Interest from July 1st.
SAVE
for a Home, for a Business, for an Education.
RESOUHCES OVER $5,000,000.00 Under U. S. Government Supervision
But Save You Must "For he who will not save will surelv come
. to want.
Save at the
First National i GARY, INDIANA
3a.
Much H
eat and Littie"Muss"
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I NEVLP UlfE TO CHEV-
A GUY VOU GAVE AtS
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